Fiercely intelligent, fantastically transgressive,ย Working Itย is an intimate portrait of the lives of sex workers. A polyphonic story of triumph, survival, and solidarity, this collection showcases the vastly different experiences and interests of those who have traded sex, among them a brothel worker in Australia, First Nation survivors of the Canadian child welfare system, and an Afro Latina single parent raising a radicalized child. Packed with first-person essays, interviews, poetry, drawings, mixed media collage, and photographsย Working Itย honors the complexity of lived experience. Sometimes heartbreaking, sometimes hardboiled, these dazzling pieces will go straight to the heart.
Praise
โIf you ever want to know what is really up, talk to a sex worker.ย Working Itย is chock-full of harsh realities, hopeful activism, hot takes, sharp writing, electric intellects, dark humorโall from the culture heroes making their dollars at the intersection of all our country’s worst problems. This is true outlaw writing, and the stories inside are of crucial importance for us all.โ
โMichelle Tea, author of over a dozen books, includingย Rent Girl,ย Valencia, andย Against Memoir
โA serious, eclectic collection that takes a critical eye to the tricky questions surrounding care and work within our society. The thinkers in the pages ofย Working Itย have a lot to teach us about both.โ
โRax King, author ofย Tacky, and co-host of the podcast Low Culture Boil
โUnder neoliberal late capitalismโwhere wage growth fails to meet the ever-growing cost of living, and the already-frayed social safety net is ever-recedingโlaborers in many sectors of the economy struggle to provide for themselves, their families, and their communities. Sex workers are among these laborers, andย Working Itย offers what the editors rightly refer to as a โkaleidoscopeโ of thought-provoking historical commentaries, academic examinations, personal narratives, and interviews. Interspersed with beautiful poems and creative images, the pieces in this collection, written by contributors representing a wide range of identities and experiences, offer readers an expansive view of sex work, while also highlighting sex workersโ broader struggles, triumphs, and collective efforts. Variously confronting issues including but not limited to racism, classism, sexism, police brutality, consent, and respectability politics,ย Working Itย indicates the challengesโbut also the hope and radical imaginationโof workers striving to meet their own needs and support each other in a broader sociocultural, political, and economic climate that is often hostile to their interests.โ
โSamantha Majic, author ofย Sex Work Politics: From Protest to Service Provision, coeditor ofย Negotiating Sex Work: Unintended Consequences of Policy and Activism, and coauthor ofย Youth Who Trade Sex in the US: Agency, Intersectionality, and Vulnerability









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